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Originally Posted by Old Tele man
Gooberment = Institutionalized greed?
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I just finished listening to an Independence Day podcast that had Jordan Peterson as a guest. I'm still processing an observation he made; that the left says look out for big business, and the right says to look out for big government, and the commonality is big.
Greed is an inescapable part of humanity. Richard Dawkins wrote a book (which I should read) titled
The Selfish Gene. Because the universe is a dangerous and difficult place to live, organisms must be programmed to be selfish to advance into the future, if not at an individual level, at least collectively.
My point is that it's no surprise that governments and corporations are self-interested, greedy, and flawed, as they are comprised of people. It happens that capitalism has so far been the best idea we have for exploiting the greedy nature of humans to maximize wealth for all.
Perhaps we would be better served if governments and corporations were broken into smaller units, with the larger units having as little power as possible.
I've always argued that the United States of America should be just that; mostly independent states interfered by federal government as little as possible. The proper role of the federal government is protect "self-evident" individual rights, provide a common defense, and little else.
Quote:
Originally Posted by oil pan 4
I still have all the money I inherited from my dad's estate and doubled it.
My sister took her half and was broke 8 months later.
Poor people are poor for a reason.
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The rich will live as though they were poor, and the poor will live as though they were rich.
I'd be the most boring game show contestant, because after winning the $1,000,000 grand-prize and being asked what I would do with the money, my response would be to turn it into $2,000,000. Money isn't just a reward; it's an obligation to good stewardship. Same with power, time, authority, ownership...the proper response to any blessing is duty.